Thorfin R. Hogness Explained

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Thorfin Rusten Hogness (December 9, 1894, Minneapolis – February 14, 1976, San Jose, California)[1] was a physical chemist, director of plutonium research for the Manhattan Project, and, after WW II, an advocate of "international control of nuclear energy".[2]

Biography

Hogness graduated from the University of Minnesota with a B.S. in 1918 in chemistry and a Ch.E. degree in 1919 in chemical engineering. He received in 1921 a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley).[3] His Ph.D. thesis is entitled The surface tensions and densities of liquid mercury, cadmium, zinc, lead, tin and bismuth.[4] From 1921 to 1930 he was a faculty member at UC Berkeley,[3] [2] except for a leave of absence from 1926 to 1927 when he had a research fellowship at the University of Göttingen.[1] In the chemistry department of the University of Chicago he became in 1930 an associate professor and in 1938 a full professor.[2]

At the University of Chicago after WW II, he continued his professorship, worked on defense research (including the development of ICBMs),[1] and served as director of applied sciences until 1962, when he retired as professor emeritus.[2] He directed from 1948 to 1951 the University of Chicago's Institute of Radiobiology and Biophysics and in 1951 established the University of Chicago's Chicago Midway Laboratories (CML), where his involvement continued until 1961.[1]

In 1946 he was one of eight members of the board of trustees of the Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, chaired by Albert Einstein.[5] In 1948 Hogness was one of a group of eight American nuclear energy experts who publicly protested the tactics of the House Committee on Un-American Activities. In 1949 following the September detection of the first Soviet atomic bomb test, he joined Harold C. Urey and other scientists in "stressing that atomic disarmament held the only hope for an international agreement."[1]

Hogness did research on "ionization of gases by electron impact; photochemistry; chemistry kinetics; spectroscopy and physical chemistry applied to biological systems and respiratory enzymes."[1]

He was elected in 1928 a fellow of the American Physical Society[6] and in 1941 a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[7]

His wife was Phoebe Swenson Hogness (1895–1972). They married in 1920[3] and had two sons: John R. Hogness (1922–2007), president (1974–1979) of the University of Washington in Seattle,[8] and David S. Hogness (1925–2019), professor of biochemistry at Stanford University.[9]

Selected publications

Articles

Books

References

  1. Web site: Biographical Note. Guide to the Thorn R. Hogness Papers, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.
  2. News: Thorfin Hogness, Chemist, 81, Dies. February 17, 1976. The New York Times. 32.
  3. Book: Cattell, Jaques. American Men of Science: A Biographical Dictionary. 1150. 1949. The Science Press. Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
  4. Web site: Thorfin Rusten Hogness . Chemistry Tree.
  5. 10.1080/00963402.1948.11460208. A Policy for Survival . 1948 . Einstein . Albert . Urey . Harold C. . Brown . Harrison . Hogness . T. R. . Mayer . Joseph E. . Morse . Philip M. . Muller . H. J. . Seitz . Frederick . Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists . 4 . 6 . 176–188 . 1948BuAtS...4f.176E .
  6. Web site: APS Fellow Archive. American Physical Society. (search on year=1928)
  7. Web site: Historic Fellows. American Association for the Advancement of Science.
  8. Web site: Gray, Leila. July 6, 2007. University of Washington, UW News. John R. Hogness, former UW president, dies at 85 .
  9. Web site: Stanford Medince News Center. January 8, 2020. Conger, Krista. Stanford biochemist David Hogness, a founder of genomics, dies at 94 .

External links